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China’s high-dividend stocks in demand as falling bond yields, rate-cut hopes add to their lure

  • The CSI Dividend Index of the 100 companies with the highest dividend yields on the mainland’s exchanges is at a level not seen since September 2021
  • The dividend index has been an outlier in China’s onshore stock market, beating the main CSI 300 benchmark every year since 2021, when the market downturn began

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A customer walks past the company logo of China CITIC Bank, at a branch in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, China. State-backed China Citic Bank has the biggest weighting on the CSI Dividend Index which has outperformed the main CSI 300 benchmark every year since 2021, when the market downturn commenced. Photo: Reuters
Zhang Shidongin Shanghai

A record-breaking rally in Chinese government bonds has compressed their yields to well below those of dividend-paying stocks whose prices have been crimped by a three-year market slump, prompting haven-seeking investors to chase cash-rich companies’ shares amid uncertainty in the world’s second largest economy.

The CSI Dividend Index of the 100 companies with the highest dividend yields on the mainland’s exchanges has risen 14 per cent this year, taking it to a level not seen since September 2021. Another CSI index tracking a group of similar stocks listed on the Shanghai bourse has fared even better, with a 16 per cent gain in the same period. Both have beaten the CSI 300 Index, the benchmark of China’s onshore yuan-denominated stocks, which has risen 6.1 per cent year-to-date.

With financials and raw-material producers comprising a bulk of its weightings, the dividend index averages a dividend yield of 5.1 per cent, according to its compiler China Securities Index. China’s 10-year sovereign bond currently yields 2.306 per cent, near its all time low of 2.226 per cent struck in April.
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China’s mixed bag of economic data in April added to the allure of these stocks, which allow investors to boost returns by generating additional income. Although the stock market has largely stabilised amid a slew of state intervention from direct buying to curbs on short selling, scepticism about whether the rebound can hold up still lingers, with Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase’s private-banking unit on the cautious side.
An investor looks at screens showing stock market movements at a securities company in Fuyang in China’s eastern Anhui province on January 17, 2024. Photo: AFP
An investor looks at screens showing stock market movements at a securities company in Fuyang in China’s eastern Anhui province on January 17, 2024. Photo: AFP

“We are still in a fragile macro-environment,” said Wang Yi, an analyst at Great Wall Securities. “Therefore, companies’ willingness to share profits and stable dividend flows have become the anchor for investors who chase visible investment returns.”

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